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'''February 19, 2009: US Justice Dept. Joins Lawsuit Against Scios/J&J'''
*[http://cardiobrief.org (CardioBrief) - The US Department of Justice has joined two whistleblower lawsuits against Scios and parent company Johnson & Johnson, "alleging that the companies marketed the cardiac drug Natrecor for a use not approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and caused false and fraudulent claims to be submitted to the federal health care programs," according to a Justice Dept. press release.  Natrecor (nesiritide) was approved in 2001. The government alleges that "Scios began an aggressive campaign to market Natrecor for scheduled, serial outpatient infusions for patients with less severe heart failure - a use not included in the FDA-approved label. These patients were prescribed Natrecor infusions for less than six hours on a scheduled basis over an extended period of time."]
'''February 19, 2009: Questions Raised Over Globalization of Clinical Research'''
*[http://cardiobrief.org (CardioBrief) - The globalization of clinical research is raising a number of troubling ethical and scientific concerns, according to a new article by Duke researchers in the New England Journal of Medicine. The problems discussed in the article include patient selection, transparency of results, regulatory oversight, experience of clinical investigators, and IRB quality. Coauthors of the paper include well-known Duke cardiologists Eric Peterson, Robert Harrington, and Robert Califf.]
'''February 19, 2009: Alzheimer's Research Looks at Prenatal Brains'''
*[http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v457/n7232/abs/nature07767.html (Wiki''Doc'') - Scientists looking at prenatal brain development have come up with a novel theory on how Alzheimer's kills brain cells.  According to research published in Nature, a chemical mechanism that "prunes" unwanted cells in early brain development may get hijacked late in life, putting the brain in a kind of self-destruct mode.  A key protein behind the pruning process, APP, is known to play a role in Alzheimer's, though researchers have been unsure how it works exactly.  The researchers plan on trying to disrupt the mechanism in adult brains, and seeing if that halts the progression of the disease.]
'''February 19, 2009: SYNTAX Published in NEJM'''
'''February 19, 2009: SYNTAX Published in NEJM'''
*[http://cardiobrief.org (CardioBrief) - The SYNTAX trial, which compared CABG to PCI in patients with 3-vessel or left main coronary disease, has been published in the ''New England Journal of Medicine''. The trial found that CABG was superior to PCI at one year, but the results have generated considerable controversy. As always, the devil is in the details.  An editorial by Richard Lange and L. David Hillis concludes that patient data needs to be reviewed by both a cardiac surgeon and an interventional cardiologist “to determine the likelihood of safe and effective revascularization with PCI and with CABG.” The implication here, then, is that “revascularization should not be performed at the time of diagnostic angiography.” This of course would entail an enormous change in standard clinical practice, at least in the United States. The SYNTAX score, which is largely an assessment of complex coronary anatomy, should play an important role in the decision in most patients who do not have a clear indication or contraindication for either procedure. The ''NEJM'' also posted an online discussion about SYNTAX with Betsy Nabel and David Hillis moderated by Thomas Lee. Nabel notes that the difference in the primary endpoint of SYNTAX was driven largely by an increase in the need for revascularization in the PCI group, while in the CABG group there was a higher incidence of stroke. (''New England Journal of Medicine'')]
*[http://cardiobrief.org (CardioBrief) - The SYNTAX trial, which compared CABG to PCI in patients with 3-vessel or left main coronary disease, has been published in the ''New England Journal of Medicine''. The trial found that CABG was superior to PCI at one year, but the results have generated considerable controversy. As always, the devil is in the details.  An editorial by Richard Lange and L. David Hillis concludes that patient data needs to be reviewed by both a cardiac surgeon and an interventional cardiologist “to determine the likelihood of safe and effective revascularization with PCI and with CABG.” The implication here, then, is that “revascularization should not be performed at the time of diagnostic angiography.” This of course would entail an enormous change in standard clinical practice, at least in the United States. The SYNTAX score, which is largely an assessment of complex coronary anatomy, should play an important role in the decision in most patients who do not have a clear indication or contraindication for either procedure. The ''NEJM'' also posted an online discussion about SYNTAX with Betsy Nabel and David Hillis moderated by Thomas Lee. Nabel notes that the difference in the primary endpoint of SYNTAX was driven largely by an increase in the need for revascularization in the PCI group, while in the CABG group there was a higher incidence of stroke. (''New England Journal of Medicine'')]

Revision as of 21:20, 19 February 2009

February 19, 2009: US Justice Dept. Joins Lawsuit Against Scios/J&J

February 19, 2009: Questions Raised Over Globalization of Clinical Research

February 19, 2009: Alzheimer's Research Looks at Prenatal Brains

February 19, 2009: SYNTAX Published in NEJM

February 19, 2009: OAT: No Improved Quality of Life Found for Late Opening of Occluded Arteries

February 19, 2009: Pharmacogenetics: A Better Path to Warfarin Dosing?

February 18, 2009: New Analysis Casts Doubt on HDL as Target for Therapy

February 17, 2009: New Data on Sudden Death in Young Athletes Published

February 17, 2009: PFO and Migraine: The Next Chapter

February 17, 2009: Elderly in Cardiogenic Shock Benefit from Early PCI

February 17, 2009: Researchers Identify First Common Genes Variants that Regulate Blood Pressure

February 17, 2009: SALT II: Letter Writers React to Alderman’s NY Times Op-Ed Piece

February 17, 2009: Stent Wars: Abbott Wins and Medtronic Loses

February 13, 2009: FDA Advisory Committee to Consider Dronedarone in March

February 13, 2009: Judge Who Ruled in Favor of Medtronic Failed to Disclose Family Link to Company

February 13, 2009: Women With NSTE ACS Don't Benefit From Invasive Procedures

February 12, 2009: Registry Sheds Light on Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy

February 12, 2009: After FAME: New Study Offers Clues to Utility of FFR

February 12, 2009: Stem Cell Drug for Heart Attacks Shown Safe in Early Testing

February 12, 2009: Genetic Code of Cold Virus Mapped

February 12, 2009: ATHENA Published in NEJM: Dronedarone Benefits AF Patients

February 12, 2009: Contrast Echo Found Useful in Technically Difficult Cases

February 11, 2009: Prasugrel: Now the Real Work Starts

February 10, 2009: David Sabiston Jr, Pioneering Surgeon, Dead at 84

February 10, 2009: PCI for MI: Experienced Hospitals and Physicians are Best

February 10, 2009: Expensive Urine: Multivitamins Have No Effect on Major Endpoints

February 10, 2009: Study Finds Lower Risk of Death for Primary Prevention Use of Statins

February 9, 2009: No Connection Between Vaccines & Autism, Original Data Faked in Lancet

February 9, 2009: Mass General Under Scrutiny for High Mortality Rate in Cath Lab

February 9, 2009: Doctors Too "Cavalier" in Prescribing Narcotics: FDA

February 9, 2009: Increased Mortality and Cardiovascular Morbidity Associated with the Use of Nonsteroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs in Chronic Heart Failure by Dr. Michael W. Tempelhof

February 9, 2009: 5 New Studies Shed New Light on the Genetics of MI

February 9, 2009: FDA Approves 2 Ablation Catheters for AF

February 6, 2009: Do beta blockers inhibit the anti-inflammatory effect of statins?

February 6, 2009: Alderman questions NYC efforts to cut salt in NY Times opinion piece

February 6, 2009: Early study finds anacetrapib safe and effective

February 6, 2009: Sir James Black, pioneer of propranolol, pans state of pharma

February 5, 2009: New DES studies add new understanding about clopidogrel duration, LAD usage, and ISR

February 5, 2009: Google & IBM Partner to Improve Online Health Records

February 4, 2009: Many Diabetics Ignore Doctor's Orders

February 4, 2009: Tomaselli Named Director of Cardiology at Johns Hopkins

February 4, 2009: BIDMC Physician Opens Mail, Finds $1 Million

February 3, 2009: FDA Panel Unanimously Recommends Approval of Prasugrel

February 3, 2009: The Uninvited: Sanjay Kaul Removed from Prasugrel’s FDA Advisory Panel

February 3, 2009: Amid Washington Uncertainty, Califf Reportedly Still in Running to be FDA Commissioner

February 3, 2009: AHA: Doctors Should Avoid Unnecessary Heart Scans

February 3, 2009: T-wave alternans may help identify some patients who don’t need an ICD

February 3, 2009: Erectile Dysfunction-Heart Disease Link Shown

February 2, 2009: Atorvastatin Gets Its Own Planetoid

February 2, 2009: Synthetic HDL Molecules Feature Heart of Gold

February 2, 2009: Noisy Traffic Can Hurt Your Heart

January 30, 2009: Prasugrel’s FDA Outlook Appears Brighter

January 30, 2009: NT-proBNP Guided vs. Symptom-Guided Heart Failure Therapy by Michael W. Tempelhof

January 30, 2009: Lancet editorial: OTC Orlistat Not in the Public Interest

January 29, 2009: Heartburn Drugs May Interfere with Plavix, Lead to 2nd Heart Attack

January 29, 2009: Generic Metoprolol Succinate Shortage Causing Problems

January 29, 2009: Urine Test for CAD in the Future?

January 29, 2009: Outpatient Surgery Skyrockets

January 28, 2009: SPECT-MPI May Be Useful in New Onset HF

January 28, 2009: FDA Warning: Dietary Supplement Contains Sibutramine

January 28, 2009: CV Therapeutics Rejects Buyout Offer From Astellas Pharma (Updated)

January 28, 2009: New Slides on ClinicalTrialResults.org

January 28, 2009: Medicare Increasing Unable to Tamp Down Cancer Costs

January 27, 2009: TIME-CHF: BNP-guided therapy misses the boat

January 27, 2009: Uric acid and insulin levels linked to risk of hypertension

January 27, 2009: Tech-Savvy Hospitals, Better Hospitals?

January 26, 2009: Larry Husten, the former editor of TheHeart.Org, will serve as WikiDoc's first Director of Medical Journalism

January 26, 2009: FDA Announces Ongoing Safety Review of Clopidogrel

January 26, 2009: Danish Researchers Recommend Avoiding NSAIDs in HF

January 26, 2009: Innovative stent company seeks emergency intervention

January 26, 2009: Evidence-Based Treatment for HF Sees Improvements

January 26, 2009: Follow-Up: Surgeons Adopting Strict Rules on Payments

January 26, 2009: Measuring Fractional Flow Reserve During PCI Improves 1-Year Outcomes

January 23, 2009: Citing Costs, Younger Americans Skipping Meds

January 23, 2009: Women with Heart Problems Often Left Waiting

January 23, 2009: 4,000-Person Drug Trial Scrapped After Sponsor Declares Bankruptcy

January 23, 2009: MA State Ethics Law Scuttles Plans for Medical Meeting

January 22, 2009: Gifts to Doctors Must Be Disclosed

January 22, 2009: Stroke Survivors with AF Have Greater Risk of Death

January 22, 2009: Women Make Better Heart Care Doctors?

January 22, 2009: American Journal of Clinical Nutrition

January 21, 2009: Pictures of a Bleeding Heart

January 21, 2009: More Doctors E-Mailing It In

January 21, 2009: Problems Pumping Iron? Maybe You’ve Got a Problem Pumping Blood

January 21, 2009: Bill Gates, Others Pledge $630 Million to End Polio

January 20, 2009: With a New President, a New Worry

January 20, 2009: First Time Heart Attacks Not as Severe

January 20, 2009: The “Sure Thing” Gene

January 20, 2009: Men Better at Resisting Temptation

January 20, 2009: Drug-Resistant Staph Infections Rising in Kids

January 16, 2009: Brian Blank has joined WikiDoc as its inaugural Scholar in Medical Journalism

January 16, 2009: Popular Health Risk Tools Don’t Find Heart Disease

January 16, 2009: Heparin-Induced Antibodies Point To Thrombosis Risk

January 16, 2009: Superbugs Vs. Cancer Drugs

January 16, 2009: Senator: Schools Failing to Regulate Medical Conflicts of Interest

January 16, 2009: Coffee Can Reduce Alzheimer’s, Cause Hallucinations

January 6, 2009: Cytochrome P450 2C19 polymorphism linked to poor outcomes for young MI patients treated with clopidogrel



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